Pen and Print by David Reber Hammer's Photography |
For the record, I do love her opening ever so much. But I won't try to sway you with my own opinions, however weighty they may be.
Happy reading!
“I see things, that's all. Write enough stories and every shadow on the floor looks like a footprint; every line in the dirt like a secret message.” ― Stephen King, Bag of Bones
Pen and Print by David Reber Hammer's Photography |
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10 comments:
As always, I am amazed by how generous you are. You are the best midwife EVER!!!
Being a book midwife is hard work, but somebody's gotta' do it. ;)
(Besides, the pay's good - free fiction and all the brainstorming sessions I could ever want. What's not to like?)
I REALLY like the term book-midwife. WOW.
The pain is comparable to childbirth and drugs don't help things any. At least a human gestation is only nine months, but a BOOK gestation....(sigh) those can take YEARS!
Hopefully the book doesn't whine at you all the time once it's been published for a few years = P
Haha, that would suck! But you know it might... it really might. Either way, I'm just midwifing - I figure once it's born out into the world, that's TZ's problem. ;)
I take "write what you know" from a different direction. Write about people.
Whether you're writing YA, children's, SF, fantasy, they all have people in them. Most of us know a lot about people, whether we want to or not. Interactions.
It doesn't mean you need to write about the street you grew up on, and your high school, and the squabbles between you and your siblings--can you imagine a book world filled with that? Yuck!
But we know how siblings interact, we know what it's like to be in a grocery store line. About half of us know what PMS stands for (Post-man syndrome) and it's relatively simple to stick those things into a book that's entirely different from what we "know."
As for writing about a nation corrupted and laid waste...look around you. :) Exagerate a little and no one will ever know the difference.
Lol, Lauren! "look around..." oh yes... real life is always the inspiration in one form or another.
Isn't it OK to MAKE IT UP?
After all, it's FICTION, right?
Why not leave it up to the reader to figure out what's real and what isn't? Kind of like a Where's Waldo of another reality, embedded in all of those Wiki facts.
And then, before you know it, a reader will write an entry into Wiki about your road, and it will become fact! Ha! Turn the page!
Wanted to email you the Nat Geo travel photo of the month, but have to settle for link:
http://travel.nationalgeographic.com/photo-of-the-week/#/japanese-maple-tree-portland-japanese-gardens-oregon_54603_600x450.jpg
I like the way you think, Rusk... and yes, I think that's perfectly valid to make it up. ;)
that photo is AMAZING! Thank you! :D
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